Simon's comments "sweeping statements" and "fantasy ideas" reflect not so much the views/attitudes of Scientists themselves as the way that new ideas are presented to the general public in newspaper and TV news reports. Whilst Scientists themselves will qualify their comments with caveats and illustrate their findings with technical data, these tend to be omitted from Media reporting in order to make eye-catching headlines, and/or because editors don't think we can cope with complex ideas and/or because they have far more important stories to print. (Years of research demonstrating the validity of Einstein's ideas? Not worth the column inches. Some overpaid football player in a drunken orgy with a trio of transgender Soap stars? Hold the front page!)
No different from Arts reporting, in fact!
To get a fairer idea of new ideas (in Science, Art ... and, probably, Football and Continuing Drama!) we have to rely on the more specialist journals: something that not everyone has the time, money or inclination to do regularly. As a result, these sad myths and misconceptions about people and their ideas become "popular".
No different from Arts reporting, in fact!
To get a fairer idea of new ideas (in Science, Art ... and, probably, Football and Continuing Drama!) we have to rely on the more specialist journals: something that not everyone has the time, money or inclination to do regularly. As a result, these sad myths and misconceptions about people and their ideas become "popular".
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